Crystal Lake Cemetery Association, a Minnesota Corporation v. United States

413 F.2d 617, 24 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 69
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1969
Docket19534_1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 413 F.2d 617 (Crystal Lake Cemetery Association, a Minnesota Corporation v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crystal Lake Cemetery Association, a Minnesota Corporation v. United States, 413 F.2d 617, 24 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 69 (8th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

FLOYD R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge.

Crystal Lake Cemetery Association (“taxpayer”) appeals from a judgment entered in the United States District *618 Court for the District of Minnesota, Chief Judge Edward J. Devitt, finding against taxpayer in its action to recover federal income tax paid 1 for 1962 attributable to a $50,000 distribution to taxpayer from its permanent care and improvement fund, such distribution being for the purpose of erecting an administration building. The District Court found that there was no basis for excluding the $50,000 from taxpayer’s income in 1962 as a contribution to capital under § 118 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 118, 2 and there was no other basis for excluding it from the statutory definition of income as set forth in § 61 of the Code, 26 U.S.C. § 61. 3

We affirm the judgment of the District Court.

The taxpayer is a for-profit corporation organized in 1897 under the laws of Minnesota for the purpose of operating a cemetery; it occupies 106.71 acres of land in the city of Minneapolis for that purpose. On August 3, 1928, in order to comply with the law of Minnesota, 4 the taxpayer, through its board of directors, entered into an agreement establishing the Crystal Lake Cemetery Association Permanent Care and Improvement Fund. The agreement provided in part that taxpayer would pay over to the trustee of the fund in each year not less than 20 per cent of the proceeds of all sales of cemetery lots in Crystal Lake Cemetery, such payment to become part of the permanent care and improvement fund. At least semiannually, the trustee would turn over to the treasurer of the Cemetery the entire net income arising from investment of the permanent fund, which income was to be used solely for the care, maintenance and improvement of Crystal Lake Cemetery. If any portion of such income was not expended or appropriated for the period of one year, it was to be turned back to the trustee and invested as part of the principal of the permanent fund.

Taxpayer could, by resolution adopted by vote of at least two-thirds of the members of its board, authorize the withdrawal and use of not more than 50 per cent of the principal of the permanent fund for certain cemetery purposes, 5 provided, however, that the *619 fund should at no time be diminished to an amount less than $1,000 per acre for each acre of land in the Cemetery. On January 22, 1962, the taxpayer’s board of directors adopted a resolution to withdraw and use not more than 50 per cent of the principal of the permanent fund, the money so withdrawn to be used for erection of an administration building. Pursuant to the resolution, the trustee disbursed $24,000 to taxpayer on October 2, 1962, and $26,000 to taxpayer on November 13, 1962. It is not disputed that the disbursement of $50,000 complied with the limitation per acre and did not operate to diminish or reduce the fund beneath the statutory or trust agreement restriction. (The trust corpus was $108,351 after the distribution, which was in excess of the minimum figure of $106,710 imposed by the restriction.) The $50,000 was used by taxpayer in the construction of an administration building costing $113,808.-98.

Upon audit of taxpayer’s federal income tax return for the year 1962, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue determined that the withdrawal of the $50,000 in 1962 from the permanent care fund was income to taxpayer in that year. On September 15, 1965, taxpayer paid the resulting deficiency and subsequently filed a claim for refund, which was disallowed by the Commissioner on January 11, 1966. Taxpayer then brought suit in the District Court, and the Court sustained the position of the Commissioner. 6

Taxpayer contends that the District Court erred in that the $50,000 remitted from the trustee to taxpayer constituted a § 118 contribution to capital and not taxable § 61 income. Taxpayer argues that it received no economic benefit from the withdrawal of the funds and subsequent erection of the building; the substance of the transaction was in furtherance of cemetery purposes which is the concern of and for the primary benefit of the lotholders — taxpayer’s economic benefit is negligible since after all lots are sold, the building, while benefiting the cemetery and lotholders, will be a liability to taxpayer; all it actually received for the $50,000 expended was the use and occupancy of the building, and the rental value of land occupied by its owner is not income to the owner. Taxpayer further contends that the $50,000 is not referable to § 111 of the Code 7 as recovery of monies from which a tax benefit accrued because it fails to meet the test of correlation — correlation between the transaction involved and the accumulation of the fund from which the withdrawal was effected. (Or, in other words, the “tax benefit rule” was not applicable.)

Taxpayer attempts to buttress its case by pointing to Minnesota law recognizing lotholders as the beneficiaries of the perpetual care and maintenance fund and severely circumscribing taxpayer’s *620 ability to alienate or mortgage the asset obtained with the contribution. Taxpayer reasons that under the “claim of right doctrine” the contribution cannot be considered taxable since the money was received by taxpayer under no claim of right thereto, but only for a restricted or limited purpose. Further, the contribution was not subject to the “unfettered command” of recipient taxpayer as the restricted power to invade the corpus of the trust was not “unfettered.” Invading the corpus for the benefit of the lotholders, consummation of a trust purpose, cannot be deemed income to taxpayer.

We hold that the $50,000 disbursed to taxpayer cemetery from the perpetual care and maintenance fund and used for the erection of an administration building constituted income to taxpayer. We agree with the District Court that “the principal purpose of the building was, or has been, to serve the profit-making activities of the taxpayer, rather than to provide for the ‘perpetual care and maintenance’ of the cemetery.”

The evidence fully supports the finding that the primary purpose of the administration building was to aid the profit-making aspect of the taxpayer’s business and lotholders were only incidentally benefited. The building was used as a general office for operation of the entire cemetery and was owned solely by the taxpayer, not by the perpetual care trust. Taxpayer conducted all aspects of its business from the building —sale of lots, records and billing, and supervision of maintenance. Equipment and supplies used in maintenance were housed in a separate building. The building contained conference rooms used for sales purposes and a carport used solely for personal automobiles. 8

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Bluebook (online)
413 F.2d 617, 24 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crystal-lake-cemetery-association-a-minnesota-corporation-v-united-states-ca8-1969.